A recall is a public safety action. It can be powerful evidence that a risk existed. But in practice, a recall does not automatically prove:
- that your specific unit was affected,
- that the recall defect caused your injury,
- or that the injuries you suffered are tied to that safety issue (instead of another cause).
In New York, insurers and defense teams often scrutinize causation and timelines closely—especially when an injury happened before the recall notice was widely known.
So the goal isn’t just to show “there was a recall.” It’s to show the recall applies to your product and that the safety problem is connected to what you went through.


